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Published in: Social Indicators Research 2/2018

01-12-2016

Electricity Supply, and Access to Water and Improved Sanitation as Determinants of Gender-Based Inequality in Educational Attainment in Africa

Authors: Ambe J. Njoh, Erick O. Ananga, Ijang B. Ngyah-Etchutambe, Lucy E. Deba, Fotoh Jacob Asah, Elizabeth N. M. Ayuk-Etang, Fenda A. Akiwumi

Published in: Social Indicators Research | Issue 2/2018

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Abstract

The central hypothesis of this study is that gender-based inequality in education in Africa depends to a significant degree on electricity supply, and access to water and improved sanitation. Gender-based educational inequality is operationalized in terms of the proportion of females to males within any given group of educated people. Three groups, people with basic literacy skills, people with primary education, and people with a secondary education, are considered. Logarithmically-transformed multiple regression analyses, with R2 values ranging from .26 to .55, confirmed the central hypothesis in all but one instance. The instance concerns the hypothesized positive link between access to improved sanitation and females with a secondary education. An analysis of the data revealed this relationship as negative. This paradoxical revelation is explained as follows. Recent positive trends in African economies have occasioned improvements in sanitation that are unmatched by a corresponding increase in female secondary education. The confirmed positive link between access to basic services and female education is easy to explain. The availability of basic services facilitates execution of domestic chores hence, free up time for girls and women to pursue educational opportunities. The article’s significance resides in its empirical validation of the following widely-held but hardly interrogated view. The progress of women in Africa is significantly retarded by the fact that they are overburdened by domestic chores.

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Metadata
Title
Electricity Supply, and Access to Water and Improved Sanitation as Determinants of Gender-Based Inequality in Educational Attainment in Africa
Authors
Ambe J. Njoh
Erick O. Ananga
Ijang B. Ngyah-Etchutambe
Lucy E. Deba
Fotoh Jacob Asah
Elizabeth N. M. Ayuk-Etang
Fenda A. Akiwumi
Publication date
01-12-2016
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Social Indicators Research / Issue 2/2018
Print ISSN: 0303-8300
Electronic ISSN: 1573-0921
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-016-1512-1

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